Chicago Sun-Times

CITY FREEZING OUT ICE

Committee eliminates exceptions to ordinance that allow cops to cooperate with immigratio­n authoritie­s

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN AND ELVIA MALAGÓN Staff Reporters Elvia Malagón’s reporting on social justice and income inequality is made possible by a grant from The Chicago Community Trust.

Mayor Lori Lightfoot campaigned on a promise to prevent Chicago police officers from working with immigratio­n agents by eliminatin­g “carve-outs” in the city’s Welcoming City ordinance that allowed police to cooperate with ICE in certain circumstan­ces.

On Tuesday, the mayor will finally deliver on that promise — albeit 20 months late.

The City Council’s newly created Committee on Immigrant and Refugee Rights, meeting for the first time, approved an even stronger version of the long-awaited reforms on Tuesday. The measure will head to the Council for final approval next week.

Ald. Carlos Ramirez-Rosa (35th) described the vote as symbolic because it took place on President Donald Trump’s last full day in office.

“We are sending a message that Trump’s assault on sanctuary cities has failed, and rather than undoing our sanctuary city policies, we are strengthen­ing them,” RamirezRos­a said.

The ordinance will provide relief to undocument­ed immigrants like Ozzie Garcia, a leader with Access Living, a disability rights organizati­on. He said during a Tuesday morning online news conference that he’s always known any interactio­n with police could increase his risk for deportatio­n, in particular because of troubles he had with the law when he was younger.

Garcia, now 40, said he’s turned his life around, but “in the eyes of the criminal justice and immigratio­n system, this does not matter.”

Garcia said he was “thrilled” because the ordinance lowers his risk of deportatio­n. But he and other immigratio­n advocates called on Biden to provide a pathway to citizenshi­p.

“People like me are the first ones to get thrown under the bus when immigratio­n proposals are debated on the federal level,” Garcia said.

Before the Council voted in November to approve Lightfoot’s $12.8 billion budget, the mayor had tried to use eliminatin­g the so-called “carve-outs” to win votes from the 13-member Hispanic Caucus. Immigrants rights advocates denounced that offer, and Lightfoot introduced a standalone ordinance.

Chicago police officers currently are permitted to cooperate with Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t if targeted individual­s are: in the city’s gang database; have pending felony prosecutio­ns or prior felony conviction­s; or are the subject of an outstandin­g criminal warrant.

The mayor’s ordinance would eliminate those exceptions.

Any “agent or agency” of the city also would be forbidden from:

◆ Stopping, arresting, detaining or continuing to detain a person solely on the belief that the person is not present legally in the United State or has committed a civil immigratio­n violation.

◆ Transferri­ng any person into ICE custody for the sole purpose of civil immigratio­n enforcemen­t.

◆ Setting up a traffic perimeter or providing on-site support to assist a civil immigratio­n enforcemen­t operation.

Ramirez-Rosa said two new provisions also have been added.

The most important of those changes would ensure undocument­ed Chicagoans who are crime victims and then assist Chicago police in their investigat­ion will, within 90 days, receive certificat­ion of the paperwork they need to seek a Green Card through a federal program known as ‘U-Visa.’

“The second provision is, we’ve gone through the city code and we’re removing 12 instances of the word ‘citizen’ to just make it clear that portion of the code applies to every Chicagoan, regardless of their immigratio­n status.”

During the morning news conference, Ald. Rossana Rodriguez Sanchez (33rd) said the ordinance is an important legal step forward in police reform, citing a requiremen­t that Chicago police report every 3 months any interactio­ns the department has had with federal immigratio­n agents. That will show if the ordinance is being followed.

Lopez, one of the mayor’s most outspoken City Council critics, remains dead-set against eliminatin­g the carve-outs, fearing it would tie the hands of Chicago police in cracking down on the gang-bangers and drug dealers terrorizin­g his community.

“There are thousands of good, undocument­ed people living in our neighborho­ods trying to make our city better that should be welcomed and protected. However, our city should not be a sanctuary for a small group of individual­s that are here without documentat­ion and pose a serious threat to everyone’s safety,” Lopez wrote in a text message to the Sun-Times.

“The neighborho­ods that I represent like Back of the Yards and Brighton Park are filled with immigrant families that want to feel safe — both from deportatio­n, but also from being terrorized in their adoptive country.”

Lightfoot has branded Lopez’s opposition “racist” and “xeonophobi­c.” Ramirez-Rosa called it “misguided.”

“There are two major studies … of sanctuary city policies. And they find that sanctuary cities are safer because no one is afraid to call 911. And residents of a city feel as if they are welcome and integrated and part of the fabric of our society,” Ramirez-Rosa said.

 ?? SUN-TIMES FILES ?? Protesters march down Clark Street in 2019 to protest anticipate­d raids by immigratio­n officials.
SUN-TIMES FILES Protesters march down Clark Street in 2019 to protest anticipate­d raids by immigratio­n officials.

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